Publisher's Synopsis
A memoir of a long-distance bicycle trip Leonard and his best friend undertook in July and August of 1965, when they were fifteen years old, riding and camping from Lansing, Michigan, through the northern Lower Peninsula and into the Upper Peninsula to Marquette, then Menominee, then across Lake Michigan by ferry to Frankfort, Michigan, and back home. Eight hundred ground miles were covered by bicycle alone, and more than a hundred additional miles by ship. The author describes in considerable detail the friends' adventures and misadventures, routes and detours, geographical and historic features, some local history, and the people who offered them help and encouragement along the way.Telling his story in a sympathetic, often comical style, the author recalls the physical rigors and hardships endured, the sacrifices made, the mechanical failures and other obstacles overcome. He describes camps made in state park campgrounds and back yards, rooms in seedy hotels, and an overnight stay in one of the world's most spectacular and prestigious resort hotels, the renowned Grand Hotel on Mackinac Island—a national historic landmark. He documents a stormy nighttime crossing of Lake Michigan on the Arthur K. Atkinson, a car-train ferry ship serving the historic Ann Arbor Railroad line—all consigned now to the realm of memory.The memoir recounts how the boys' companionship is ultimately shattered by a heartbreaking mechanical breakdown, and how the author was forced to complete the final 150-mile homeward journey alone. In a bittersweet epilogue, the author speculates how and whether such an adventure would succeed if it were to happen today. He lays much of the credit for its success at the door of the helpful strangers who befriended them. Finally, he reflects on the meaning of the experience (and the friendship) within the context of his life, from the vantage point of almost sixty years' time.